THE INVENTION OF WRITING 3150 BC – AD 1450
Graphic communication grew from the foundations of CroMagnon culture in Europe. Although it’s been thousands of years, our writing, in fact, still uses varieties of some of the first written symbols invented. From the years 3150 BCE to 1450 AD, written symbols were created, practiced and revolutionized, laying the groundwork for our currently written-driven world. Letter forms have evolved and writing systems have developed due to our need to represent things and ideas, to record data and preserve the past, and to express our thoughts. As Allen Haley wrote in the book Alphabet: The History, Evolution, and Design of the Letters We Use Today, “Writing is words made visible. In the broadest sense, it is everything – pictured, drawn or arranged – that can be turned into a spoken account.
The fundamental purpose of writing is to convey ideas. Our ancestors, however, were designers long before they were writers, and in their pictures, drawings and arrangements, design played a prominent role in communication from the very beginning. In this exploration of the early written alphabet, we will study almost 5000 years of written design history. Spanning from the earliest, pictorial, “written” records, to the revolutionary invention of type, this investigation features the foundation and early beginnings of written language.
TA B L E O F C O N T E N T S 02
Introduction
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Cave Painting
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Cuneiform
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Egyptian Writing
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Chinese Contribution
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Writing Supports
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Phoenician Alphabet
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Greek Alphabet
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Codices & Manuscripts
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Letter forms
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Gothic Textura & Quadrata
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The Late Gothic
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Roman Writing
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Illuminated Manuscripts
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Bibliography
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Right: The Caves of Lascaux in France Below: When the caves were discovered at the end of World War II, they became a huge tourist destination. In 1968, the caves were closed to the public, as it was discovered that the artificial lights used were fading the cave paintings and algae and mold were growing due to visitors. To fight the growth of further mold, presently, only one person is allowed in the cave once a week for 20 minutes to check on the climate conditions.
CAVE PAINTINGS From 15,000 – 10,000 BCE, Cro-Magnon painters rendered deer, bison and other game on cave walls in Lascaux, France, which were discovered by Marcel Ravidat in 1940. The cave features almost 2000 images of animals and symbols and one human figure. The Lascaux cave paintings have sustained thousands of years, and many images are surprisingly still recognizable. What is even more impressive than the longevity of the images, however, is the craft that went into creating them. Ancient artists considered composition, color, pattern, scale, line weight and overall care in image quality in creating the paintings. Also, there was deliberate thought put into mixing unique pigments and preparing materials in advance. This suggests that there was time between conceiving the idea and producing the product, allowing for reflection and planning, which may be the earliest example of design conception and design related critical thinking. As stated in Graphic Design History: “Although it would be a stretch to call the world of prehistoric cave painters a design community, rules governing what was formally possible and acceptable were followed by the artists. The artists did not simply invent visual solutions at random in response to circumstances or impulses. They produced highly organized works of art, designed according to formal and cultural conventions. This social basis for form arguably marks the beginning of graphic communication.� Pictographs are pictorial symbols that create a message, and they formed the groundwork of early written language in Egyptian, Sumerian and Chinese cultures. Pictographs represented true objects in the physical world through sequential images on walls, stone tablets or early forms of paper. Through pictographs, early civilizations could keep records and share stories with future generations; although, the true reasoning behind making pictographs is not known. Pictographs could simply be representations of what was seen at the time with no real reason behind them.
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CUNEIFORM Cuneiform was used in ancient Sumerian culture, and it is among the many languages that have never been fully decoded. Pictorial symbols, or pictographs, shifted into schematic signs, which stabilized the writing. Cuneiform was both efficient as graphics, and an entirely developed code for language because it condensed thousands of pictographs from previous time into 560 cuneiform. The word cuneiform means “wedge-shaped,� alluding to the formation of letters. Small strokes were carved in clay tablets to keep record of food or elementary level decimals. Scribes used sharpened reed styluses to create fine and curved lines in wet clay. Using columns and working from the top right corner, scribes scratched the surface, writing lines. The marks created a code for language, aligning
with the code for speech used verbally. After carving, tablets were placed in the sun or a kiln to harden and dry, making them strong enough to last until the present day. Cuneiform script spread to numerous other cultures and was mainly used for diplomatic or governmental purposes in the third and second millennia BCE. In about 1400 BCE, the diplomatic use of cuneiform was at its most popular. At that time, it could be found in what is now Iraq, Syria, Egypt, Palestine and Turkey. This created a pattern that would be followed many more times in the history of writing: that a writing system would develop for one language by the shape of another. Cuneiform was graphically efficient. But beyond that, cuneiform was a completely developed, adjustable code for language.
Left: Cuneiform means “wedged-shaped.� These examples of cuneiform carved into walls and tablets emphasize where tools were wedged into the material, creating legible symbols. Above: Cuneiform advanced steadily through different cultures over time. At the peak of its use, it was a fully developed, adjustable, written code for language.
Cuneiform helped develop the idea of writing, which was just as influential as the actual writing itself. This time was monumental, as it was found that developed writing had the ability to represent language. Both the idea and the actual writing spread to other areas in the ancient Near East, and various hybrids of cuneiform developed in the second millennium BCE, changing pictographs to sign systems. This is believed to have led to Egyptian hieroglyphics, although an exact time period for the beginning of Egyptian writing is not known, and Egyptian and Sumerian writing may have developed at the same time.
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EGYPTIAN WRITING It is not completely certain which writing style came first: Sumerian or Egyptian, but both styles influenced and led to our modern writing styles. While Sumerian image-based writing style grew into cuneiform, the Egyptians kept their picture-style writing as hieroglyphics. The Egyptians began using this writing style around 3400 BCE and continued to use it until about 400 AD. Hieroglyphics are stylized pictures or pictographs that depicted objects or people. Combined, they named ideas, sounds and categories. These combinations were called ideographs. Choice of writing direction increased the flexibility and efficiency of hieroglyphic design substantially. The author started from the direction where the living creatures were facing. From there, the lines of “text” could be written in different directions: left to right horizontally, left to right horizontally, right to left in vertical columns and left to right in vertical columns. This allowed for a huge increase in design possibilities. Hieroglyphics are semantic, which means they relate to language and logic, and phonetic, which means the symbols and sounds connect. The ancient Egyptians were remarkable designers and were understanding of ornamental and textural qualities of hieroglyphics. The Type History Presentation states that, “Egyptians used surrounding objects as tools. For paper, they used papyrus reed, a water/marsh plant that was dried and joined into rolls. They would also use pottery, boards, and leather if papyrus was scarce. For paint, they would use pigment from
plants that they ground up and mixed with water. For brushes, reeds with split ends were relied on because they created fine lines.” Hieroglyphics were carved into rock as either raised image or as relief, and sometimes color was added. Some were simple outlines, while others were highly decorative. Egyptian hieroglyphics were mostly used for formal engravings on tomb and temple walls. However, scribes did use hieroglyphics in a more handwritten way or in hieratic style for everyday use. Scribes using hieroglyphics accounted for all taxes, orders, accounting records and products. They had a high level of responsibility in keeping society running efficiently and creating historical records. Ancient Egypt influenced much of Western civilization as we know it today. Greeks were heavily influenced by Egyptians, and from the Greeks, we took the zodiac, judicial systems, and use of animals to represent concepts and people. Much of what we practice today started with the Egyptians and the power of early writing.
Above: Cursive hieroglyphics on a portion of the Papyrus of Ani. Below: The Rosetta Stone contains writing in two languages (Egyptian and Greek), using three scripts (hieroglyphic, demotic and Greek). When created around 196 BCE, the three scripts were regularly used in Egypt for different purposes. Hieroglyphic script was used for religious or other important documents. Demotic was the common script for other records. And, Greek was the language that most rulers of Egypt spoke at that time. Right: Hieroglyphics were created by either carving away surface, painting outlines, or painting full images in color on walls, tablets and tombs.
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Above: The Oracle Bone inscriptions are the earliest form of Chinese characters found to date. The bones were discovered in the nineteenth century and were believed to have superstitious powers, like “dragon bones.� Below: Ancient Chinese calligraphy style is still practiced today by modern calligraphers.
CHINESE CONTRIBUTION Writing in China developed after 1500 BCE, and it was possibly influenced by other Asian or European cultures, although it appears to have come about independently. Chinese characters transformed from pictorial roots to schematic signs quite quickly. It was once thought to be ideographic, representing ideas visually. Chinese characters repeatedly represented words, sounds or combinations of both, making a more practical writing system that used a sign for every word. However, it is now believed that the written language uses a logographic system (symbols that indicate complete words or phrases) and Chinese symbols which are known as characters. Each character corresponds to one intentional unit of language, not simply a unit of thought. Chinese characters and script adapted into Japanese, Korean and other languages, which proves its versatility and ingenuity. Chinese writers used a wooden stylus to write with lacquer on wood and a brush and ink to write on bones or other surfaces. Sometimes, tools were used to remove material, rather than add to surface material to create writing as well. Modern Chinese calligraphers continue to use customary brushes and ink to practice and restore the tradition of Chinese writing and calligraphy. During the Han dynasty in the first century, the Chinese created an early version of what we now know as paper. They took inspiration from the wasp, which makes its nest from chewing vegetable fibers and pressing them together. The Chinese people used anything they had available in lieu of vegetable fibers to create this paper, including old fisherman nets and worn out rope, which they soaked in water and pressed to the desired thickness.
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Above: Papyrus laid on a light table shows the weaving pattern used to piece the material together.
WRITING SUPPORTS Papyrus was the most commonly used writing support in the ancient world. It was first used in Egypt, but then spread to Greece and Rome. Its use was then spread throughout their empires and was finally then introduced to northern Europe. The process of making papyrus was described by Timothy Graham and Raymond Clemens in their book, Introduction to the Medieval Manuscript. It was made by taking the triangular stalk of the plant, removing the outer bark, and cutting or peeling the underlying substrate or pith away from the lower stem of the plant. The pith was then cut into manageable lengths and sliced into thin strips or fibers. The fibers were placed side by side until they formed square; then a second layer of fibers was laid on top, at right angles to the first, and the two layers were pounded or pressed together to form a single square. The papyrus had to be wet during this stage so that its gummy sap would bond the sheet together. The sheet was then laid out to dry; once dry, it would be rubbed smooth, and several finished sheets would be pasted together to form a roll. Pliny describes the process in a similar fashion, using water from the Nile to weave and paste together these strips of papyrus. Typically, rolls of papyrus would be 20 pages long, the first remaining blank to protect the manuscript. It was opened horizontally, or “landscape” as we might refer to it today, with two columns of text per sheet. When the Roman empire diminished, papyrus was used less due to the difficulty in the means for obtaining it. It was still used for specialized purposes, in royal charters for example, until the 11th century.
Paper was first made by the Chinese and is credited
as being discovered by Ts’ai Lun in 105 AD. Skeptics believe this credit isn’t true since paper usage research states that paper was in existence nearly 200 years prior. Paper was made from cellulose, which is made of flax, hemp, and linen, or better known as ship sails. They were moistened and rolled into balls or placed into a vat and fermented from anywhere between 6 weeks to 2 months. Most medieval manuscripts were written on parchment. Parchment was invented by King Eumenes II of Pergamum. By 2nd century BC, most papyrus was replaced by parchment, and then became the favored writing support by the 4th Century AD. Calf, sheep and goat skins were most commonly used to make parchment. Calfskin made the best quality parchment due to its white or creamy coloring, and was used most often in Northern Europe. Goatskin was used most often in Italy. Sheepskin was used the least often, or in documents with less importance since it created a yellow backdrop with greasy and shiny spots in places. Parchment was made by dividing the skin into two layers, utilizing the fleshy underside and stretching it over a frame. Vellum is different as it utilizes the entire skin, not splitting it into two layers as parchment does. Other than this difference, the process of creating parchment and vellum is the same. This process is described by Dard Hunter, “The present-day method of treating parchment and vellum is carried out in the following rotation: washing the skin, rubbing it with lime, removing the hair, scraping the skin with a curved knife, and again washing. The partially cleansed skin is then stretched tightly, by use of leather thongs, in a four-sided wooden frame, and the scraping is continued to pare away any irregularities in the skin, leaving it of an even thickness throughout its entire surface. Lastly the skin is dusted with powdered chalk and laboriously rubbed. with fine pumice (pg. 15).”
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PHOENICIAN ALPHABET From the years 1500 BCE to 1000 BCE, the Phoenicians developed a set of 22 symbols, hugely condensed from the 560 cuneiforms used by the Sumerian people. The Phoenicians had previously written with a cuneiform script. The Phoenician alphabet was possibly the first widely used alphabetic script. The 22 letters varied noticeably in their forms, which made reading the script easier. All 22 letters were what we now know as consonants; there were no vowels. The names and shapes of each letter ultimately refers back to hieroglyphs of the ancient Egyptians, although some names of letters were changed by the Phoenicians. The Phoenician alphabet spread widely though the Mediterranean. The surge in usage was partially driven by the desire to make more money. Phoenicians were international merchants and travelers. They did
business with several different cultures, including: Egypt to the South and Mesopotamia in the West. With a new written language, they were able to make business transactions more efficiently, instead of using hieroglyphics in the South and cuneiforms in the West. The language was regularly spoken until the first century AD. The Phoenician alphabet led to the development of writing the Greeks produced. It is also an ancestor of the Modern Roman alphabet. The condensed alphabet was easily the Phoenicians’ largest and most outstanding contribution to the rest of the world.
Above: Phoenician Alphabet stone tablet inscription Right: The Phoenician alphabet with its modern day translation.
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Greek Black Figure Vessel with Double Alphabet Inscription
GREEK ALPHABET The Phoenician alphabet led to the development of the Greek alphabet. Circa 800 BC, the Greeks borrowed the Phoenician alphabet, adapting some of the symbols as vowels. Valentine states that this helps create more accurate documentation of the time. “When the Greeks borrowed the Phoenician alphabet, circa 800 BC, they adapted some of the symbols (aleph=a) as vowels since Greek did not need all the sound symbols of Phoenician. In this way, a more precise visual record of the spoken language was created and, importantly for our purposes, preserved. Greek became a written language; the Romans borrowed the script from them, with some adaptations over time, and we are using essentially the same alphabet today (pg. 11).” The Greek alphabet also served as a path to democracy in a way. According to Johanna Drucker and Emily McVarish, in Graphic Design History, “In Greece, the new writing system was linked to democracy insofar as literacy was a requirement for citizenship and its rights. But whether the unique properties of Greek writing caused the advent of this form of government or merely participated in its institutions is an open question (pg. 18).” The earliest form of the Greek alphabet used only majuscules, as inspired by the Phoenician alphabet. This alphabet later went on to become the basis for the Latin alphabet and Roman writing.
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Above: Scrolls were commonly used to document important events such as charters, over time they were replaced with the codex. Below: The codex, also known today as a book, was a new way of formatting documents in Medieval times.
CODICES & MANUSCRIPTS There are a wide variety of materials that were used to write on in ancient times. Examples of these materials range from wax and stone tablets to animal skins which led to parchment. The common formatting for these materials was often in a scroll. This was true up until around 300 AD.
expanded on a regular basis, such as court records or collections of monastic prayers for the dead,the roll allowed for economical accumulation of material over time with additional membrane added only as needed. (Pg. 250).”
Following scrolls, a common format was codices, which are known today as books. The codex was used widely by the early Christians and took more than a century to replace the scroll. Patrick Valentine describes the process of creating a codex: “To make a codex, parchment was folded in half, then half again, and then again until there were 8 sheets, about the size of a modern notebook. This could then be stitched together and then protected by a cover of wood and called a codex.” (Pg. 17)
Early codices were handwritten, which led to the term manuscript. “Manu” is Latin for hand.
From about 400 AD to the late twentieth century, the codex became the primary manner of storing records. It is important to note that the codex did not entirely replace the scroll.
When a high demand appeared for specific texts, highly organized scriptoriums arose. It was common for many errors to occur in these handwritten documents. Often times, the scribes would also rewrite pieces of the text they felt were hard to understand or reword the text in their own words in order to better understand it or commit it to memory. These changes they made are known as textual variants.
“While the codex certainly supplanted the role for most purposes, it did not entirely replace it, for several reasons. Rolls carried with them a symbolic cultural significance, particularly in regard to royal proclamations and certain religious texts. In many situations rolls were seen as more practical than codices. They were less expensive to produce than books because they did not need to be bound but were more substantial than single sheets, which might get lost or damaged. The form of the roll, although simple, is very effective in protecting its contents when it is rolled up, usually with the hair side outward. For records that would be
In Medieval times, prior to the invention of printing, scribes would copy a text, then pass it on to a rubricator, who would then add decorative capital letters and ornamentation. Special pigments would be created by grinding precious stones, and at times, the rubricator would use colored inks.
One of the most famous manuscripts was created in Ireland somewhere around 800 AD. This manuscript is known as the Book of Kells and features the New Testament with decorative ornamentation known as illumination. Other popular manuscripts include the Lindisfarne Gospels, and the Book of Durrow.
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LETTERFORMS MAJESCULE LETTERS Majuscules are defined by Clemens and Graham in their book, Introduction to Manuscript Studies, as “A script in which all the letters are the same height. Also called a bilinear script because all the letters fit between the Headline and the Baseline (Pg. 267).” Majuscules are otherwise known as capital or uppercase letters in today’s world. The term majuscule could be used to describe uncials in Greek and Roman writings. As described in Meggs’
History of Graphic Design, “Uncials are rounded freely drawn majuscule letters more suited to rapid writing than either square capitals or rustic capitals.” As time went on certain letters in the uncial style began to form ascenders and descenders, but ultimately stuck to majuscule letters. Eventually though, minuscules began their development through half-uncials.
Above: Majuscule letterforms appear on the top of an announcement. Today we know this letterform as a capital or uppercase letter. Left: Caroline Minuscules were created in the 8th century and were credited to King Charlemagne.
CAROLINE MINUSCULES As noted in the book, Introduction to Manuscript Studies, “The creation of Caroline minuscule was the most important development in the evolution of script in the entire Middle Ages; its repercussions remain with us today, for with one exception (tall s), all its letter forms are still in use. Caroline minuscule is thought to have emerged in the last third of the 8th century. The creation of Caroline minuscule is in part credited to Charlemagne, but was largely
influenced by an Anglo-Saxon scholar named Alcuin, whom Charlemagne appointed as abbot of Saint-Martin Monastery at Tours. Alcuin worked to correct the text of the Bible while he was there, as described by authors, Clemens and Graham, “...during his abbacy and those of his successors, the Tours scriptorium produced large numbers of manuscripts, many of which were exported to other centers within the Carolingian empire and thereby served to diffuse the nearly perfected script (pg. 143).”
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GOTHIC TEXTURA & QUADRATA Gothic Textura scripts are given such a name for two reasons. First they are from the gothic period of the Middle Ages. Second, the way the letters were shaped and placed together created a pattern that could be described as a woven design. The Latin word for woven is “textura”.
There are two types of gothica textura scripts. The first is gothic textura quadrata which consists of the bottom of most strokes the line is turned at an angle to make a fancy foot. The second type is gothic textura prescisus vel sine pedibus which is different because most lines ended flat, with no fancy foot incorporated.
Textura, early thirteenth century, Gothic scripts had been more condensed vertically and made extensive use of ligatures or joined letters that were more efficient to write. The new approach to letter placement was one of the most significant attributes of the Gothic Textura scripts.
Gothic Quadrata scribe begins and ends each minim with a diamond shaped serif. Quadrata script was the model for the earliest German printers. This type was also used for the Gutenberg Bible and even survived into the twentieth century as Fraktur.
“Textura, a tightly written manuscript hand or typeface with narrowly spaced strokes, suggestive of a woven pattern; condensed black letter hands.” (Graphic Design History pg.43) During the fourteenth and fifteenth century, Textura was a generic term used for scripts. It was a tightly written type that was carefully wrought during the middle ages. The origin of textura comes from the textile like interweaving of their elaborate intricate shapes. The skills and time that took to produce this type was reserved for religious texts and was the only type that was deemed worthy. Due to the anatomy such as the angles, corners, and dense black quality, this script was not ideal for secular texts.
Some distinctive features of Gothic Quadrata is the uprightness and also the angularity of each character. The angularity is used as a substitute for using curves. A good example is that the letter “O” in quadrata is made up of six strokes which resembles a hexagon. A downside about the anatomy of quadrata is that the minims are all the same height which can cause the readability to suffer. Similar to Gothic Quadrata there is also Semi-Quadrata. The difference is that the tops of minims in semi-quadrata are consistently given diamond shaped serifs, while the bottoms are treated more loosely.
Above: Latin Script (Blackletter hand) 12th Century – 1946 Below: Gothic Textura Prescisus vel sine Pedibus Luttrell Psalter Right: Gothica Textura Quadrata
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The Douce Apocalypse 1265
THE LATE GOTHIC 13T H C E N T U RY Gothic book hand in the late thirteenth century was more open and legible than many earlier textura scripts. The characteristic “breaking” of curves into angular forms required two or more combined strokes.
14 T H C E N T U RY The “hands” and “feet” of the letters. as well as the ascenders and descenders, became shorter, more robust. Used by the Catholic Church, gothic scripts carried a religious connotation that reflected the aspiration to move upward toward spiritual realms. Germans and English blackletter types preserved these forms in the era of printing. An example of the Gothic scripts would be the Douce Apocalypse. This manuscript is a portion of a series of illuminated manuscripts telling of the apolcalyptic visions of St. John. It was created between 1250 and 1275. A few of the images within the manuscript were left unfinished which gives it an especially interesting insight into the nature of the artist at the time. The Douce Apocalypse also uses uppercase and lowercase letterforms and the conventions of columns and margins for page layout. This type style is called Textura, the dominant writing style of the Gothic period.
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Right: Rustic Roman capitals carved inscription Below: Roman uncials, 4th Century AD The proliferation of manuscript writing and the business of book production prompted the development of rounded, more freely drawn capital letters called Uncials. The rounded capitals use fewer strokes than Square Capitals or Rustic Capitals. For example, a Roman Capital “E� requires 1 vertical and 3 horizontal strokes. The Roman Uncial requires 1 curve and 1 horizontal stroke. Still, these are all capital, uppercase letterforms.
ROMAN WRITING C A P I TA L I S Q U A D R ATA Formal types of Old Roman scripts were square capitals or capitalis quadrata, used mainly for carved inscriptions. This was known as scriptura monumentalis, it was an angular majuscule script that was often written without breaks between words but was separated by dots.
ROMAN RUSTIC WRITING Rustic Capitals (in Latin capitalis rustica) is an ancient roman calligraphic script. Similar to Roman Square, Rustic Capitals is less rigid and is influenced more by pen and ink writing used on papyrus or parchment. The letter forms that Roman Capitals portray are thinner strokes and the tracking of the letters were more compressed. Unlike the angularity that was used in gothica textura script, Roman capitals used more curved lines and utilized descenders extending below the baseline. The script was used between the first and ninth centuries, most often between the fourth and sixth centuries. After the fifth century, rustic capitals began to fall out of use, but they continued to be used as a display script in titles and headings, along with uncial asthe script of the main text.
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ILLUMINATED MANUSCRIPTS In the strictest definition of an illuminated manuscript, it refers only to manuscripts decorated with gold or silver. But an illuminated manuscript can also be defined as texts that is supplemented by the addition of decoration, such as decorated initials, borders (marginalia), and miniature illustrations. The earliest surviving illuminated manuscripts are from period AD 400 to 600, initially produced in Italy and the Eastern Roman Empire. The significance of these works lies not only in their inherent artistic and historical value, but in the maintenance of a link of literacy offered by nonilluminated texts, as well.
The majority of surviving manuscripts are from the Middle Ages, although many illuminated manuscripts survive from the Renaissance, along with a very limited number from Late Antiquity. The majority of these manuscripts are of a religious nature. However, especially from the 13th century onward, an increasing number of secular texts were illuminated. Most illuminated manuscripts were created as Codices, which had superseded Scrolls. A very few illuminated manuscript fragments survive on Papyrus, which does not last nearly as long as Vellum or Parchment. Most medieval manuscripts, illuminated or not, were written on parchment (most commonly of calf, sheep, or
Left: Illuminated manuscript decorated with gold and silver Above: Book of Kells, 800 AD The years of the Dark Ages—c. 400-1400 AD—experienced the collapse of the Roman Empire and the collapse of its momentum of progress. Societies were dispersed and isolated. One significant area of progress at this time persisted in book craft. Belief in important religious texts promoted the production of books. Ireland was spared from Barbarian invasion during the medieval era and so the region produced great manuscript illumination, like this example from the Book of Kells, around 800 AD. Nearly all books were being written in monasteries, by scribes who were production letterers. The head scribe was the editor, art director and production manager. Letterers collaborated with illustrators, who added ornament and image—illumination—in support of the text.
goat skin), but most manuscripts important enough to illuminate were written on the best quality of parchment, called vellum. Beginning in the late Middle Ages manuscripts began to be produced on paper. Very early printed books were sometimes produced with spaces left for rubrics and miniatures, or were given illuminated initials, or decorations in the margin, but the introduction of printing rapidly led to the decline of illumination. Illuminated manuscripts continued to be produced in the early 16th century, but in much smaller numbers, mostly for the very wealthy.
Manuscripts are among the most common items to survive from the Middle Ages; many thousands survive. They are also the best surviving specimens of medieval painting, and the best preserved. Indeed, for many areas and time periods, they are the only surviving examples of painting.
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BIBLIOGRAPHY Carter, R., Day, B., & Meggs, P. (2012). The Evolution of Typography. In Typographic Design: Form and Communication (5th ed., pp. 1-6). Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons. Clemens, R., & Graham, T. (2007). Introduction to Manuscript Studies (First ed.). Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press. Crisp, D., & Temple, W. (2012). Graphic Design in Context: Typography (1st ed.). New York, NY: Thames & Hudson. Drogin, Marc. Calligraphy of the Middle Ages and How to Do It. Google Books. Dover Publications, n.d. Web. 10 Nov. 2014. Drucker, J., & McVarish, E. (2013). Graphic Design History: A Critical Guide (2nd ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson. Gaur, A. (1984). A History of Writing (pp. 8-58). New York, NY: Cross River Press. Heller, J. (1978). Papermaking (pp. 26-31). New York, NY: WatsonGuptill Publications, a division of Billboard Publications. Hogben, L. (1949). From Cave Painting to Comic Strip: A Kaleidoscope of Human Communication. London: Max Parrish & Co. Ltd. London. Hunter, D. (1978). Papermaking: The History and Technique of an Ancient Craft (2nd ed., pp. 12-19). Mineola, NY: Courier Dover Publications. Irwin, K. G. (1956). The Romance of Writing. New York: The Viking Press. Meggs, P. B., & Purvis, A. W. (2012). Megg’s History of Graphic Design. Hoboken: John Wiley & Sons. Tillotson, Dianne. “Roman Scripts.” Roman Scripts. N.p., 3 Oct. 2009. Web. 10 Nov. 2014. Valentine, P. (2012). Early Books: Beginnings to circa 1450. In A Social History of Books and Libraries from Cuneiform to Bytes (pp. 6-22). Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press. What is the History of Pictographs? (n.d.). Retrieved November 8, 2014. http://www.innovateus.net/innopedia/what-history-pictographs Windels, F. (1950). The Lascaux Cave Paintings. New York: The Viking Press.
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